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Because the
Friedmans had documented their own lives
with copious home movies, filmmaker Andrew
Jarecki is able to sift through their
material looking for clues. Yet what
emerges is more surreal than fiction: the
youngest Friedman son went to jail, the
eldest became a birthday-party clown. In
the end, we can't be sure whether Arnold
Friedman is a monstrous child molester or
the victim of railroading. The portrait of
a disconnected family is deeply
disturbing, either way, and this film is
further proof that a documentary can be
just as spellbinding as anything a great
storyteller dreams up. --Robert Horton
Product Description
Winner of
the Grand Jury Prize at the 2003 Sundance
Film Festival, and with over $3 million at
the box office to date, Capturing The
Friedmans is nothing short of the most
riveting, provocative, and hotly debated
films of the year. Despite their
predilection for hamming it up in front of
home-movie cameras, the Friedmans were a
normal middle-class family living in the
affluent New York suburb of Great Neck.
One Thanksgiving, as the family gathers at
home for a quiet holiday dinner, their
front door explodes, splintered by a
police battering ram. Officers rush into
the house, accusing Arnold Friedman and
his youngest son Jesse of hundreds of
shocking crimes. The film follows their
story from the public?s perspective and
through unique real footage of the family
in crisis, shot inside the Friedman house.
As the police investigate, and the
community reacts, the fabric of the family
begins to disintegrate, revealing
provocative questions about truth,
justice, family, and -ultimately-truth.
With an abundance of exclusive DVD bonus
features supplied on a second disc,
Capturing the Friedmans is sure to capture
you and pin you to your seat.
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